WWF’s recent “Living Planet Report” offers a bit of hope, showing that mountain gorilla populations increased by 3% between 2010 and 2016. Conservation interventions such as dedicated management of ...
A continuously rising demand for natural resources and increasing levels of CO2 in the atmosphere by a growing population are putting tremendous pressures on our planet s biodiversity, and are ...
Habitat loss caused by human food production has led to a jaw-dropping 73% decline in wildlife populations. When ecosystems are this damaged, they’re more vulnerable tipping points – or the point of ...
The recently published Living Planet Report documents a dramatic loss of wildlife over the last 50 years, from 1970 to 2020. Overall, monitored wildlife populations shrank by 73%, with the sharpest ...
Worldwide wildlife populations have shrunk by nearly three-quarters on average over the past 50 years, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said Thursday in the latest edition of its Living Planet Report.
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